Australian Traveller
A family guide to where to eat, stay and play in Sydney 09 June 2021 . BY Megan Arkinstall
Your go-to guide to Sydney’s best places to eat, sleep and top things to do with kids.
Where to eat in Sydney with kids
Sydneysiders are known for their love of eating out, and they don’t limit their choices to one type of cuisine. Sampling everything from Malaysian curries to fresh pasta dishes to sushi is as easy as flitting from one neighbourhood or suburb to the next.
Dine in or grab-and-go at this European food emporium, which serves fresh Italian-style food made with produce direct from the Bel & Brio farm. Coffee is from Bondi roasters Will & Co, and there’s freshly baked Italian pastries such as Sicilian cannoli, or savoury items such as bacon and egg brioche and bruschetta. The Marketplace stocks ready-made meals, too, so you can grab a fresh baguette and cold-pressed juice and head to the nearby waterfront lawns of Barangaroo to have brekkie with
The four bedroom home in Burleigh Heads sold to the highest bidder for $3.75million in what has been dubbed the biggest ever on site auction on the Gold Coast .
A family from Sydney has walked the full length of New Zealand from tip to tip
The Gerlach family finished the 3,000km journey known as Te Araroa last week
Parents Tom and Deanna took their children Juno, 12, Joplin, 10 and Goldie, 6
Goldie who began the journey aged five is believed to be the youngest to finish
The parents said the children learnt a huge amount about themselves
Sydney Melbourne Brisbane suburbs with massive property price increases in three months dailymail.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from dailymail.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A row over native titles has erupted between group claiming to be descended from King Bungaree (pictured) - a legendary Aborginal explorer
An extraordinary row has erupted between groups claiming to be the descendants of an iconic Indigenous leader in a bid to lay claim to prized native title rights.
A group who say they are from the Awabakal and Guringai ancestral tribe have won their bid to claim traditional ownership of 1.6ha of land in Belrose on Sydney s Northern Beaches.
Members of the group had already tried and failed to gain native title rights over a massive area of land extending for more than 100km between Hornsby and Newcastle.